Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.

Physical activity and exercise are key components of energy expenditure and therefore of energy balance. Changes in energy balance alter fat mass. It is therefore reasonable to ask: What are the links between physical activity and adipose tissue function? There are many complexities. Physical activi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thompson, D, Karpe, F, Lafontan, M, Frayn, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2012
_version_ 1797056304900997120
author Thompson, D
Karpe, F
Lafontan, M
Frayn, K
author_facet Thompson, D
Karpe, F
Lafontan, M
Frayn, K
author_sort Thompson, D
collection OXFORD
description Physical activity and exercise are key components of energy expenditure and therefore of energy balance. Changes in energy balance alter fat mass. It is therefore reasonable to ask: What are the links between physical activity and adipose tissue function? There are many complexities. Physical activity is a multifaceted behavior of which exercise is just one component. Physical activity influences adipose tissue both acutely and in the longer term. A single bout of exercise stimulates adipose tissue blood flow and fat mobilization, resulting in delivery of fatty acids to skeletal muscles at a rate well-matched to metabolic requirements, except perhaps in vigorous intensity exercise. The stimuli include adrenergic and other circulating factors. There is a period following an exercise bout when fatty acids are directed away from adipose tissue to other tissues such as skeletal muscle, reducing dietary fat storage in adipose. With chronic exercise (training), there are changes in adipose tissue physiology, particularly an enhanced fat mobilization during acute exercise. It is difficult, however, to distinguish chronic "structural" changes from those associated with the last exercise bout. In addition, it is difficult to distinguish between the effects of training per se and negative energy balance. Epidemiological observations support the idea that physically active people have relatively low fat mass, and intervention studies tend to show that exercise training reduces fat mass. A much-discussed effect of exercise versus calorie restriction in preferentially reducing visceral fat is not borne out by meta-analyses. We conclude that, in addition to the regulation of fat mass, physical activity may contribute to metabolic health through beneficial dynamic changes within adipose tissue in response to each activity bout.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:21:30Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:1a41431b-4a8f-4644-abee-e830c499f7d6
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:21:30Z
publishDate 2012
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:1a41431b-4a8f-4644-abee-e830c499f7d62022-03-26T10:53:45ZPhysical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1a41431b-4a8f-4644-abee-e830c499f7d6EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Thompson, DKarpe, FLafontan, MFrayn, KPhysical activity and exercise are key components of energy expenditure and therefore of energy balance. Changes in energy balance alter fat mass. It is therefore reasonable to ask: What are the links between physical activity and adipose tissue function? There are many complexities. Physical activity is a multifaceted behavior of which exercise is just one component. Physical activity influences adipose tissue both acutely and in the longer term. A single bout of exercise stimulates adipose tissue blood flow and fat mobilization, resulting in delivery of fatty acids to skeletal muscles at a rate well-matched to metabolic requirements, except perhaps in vigorous intensity exercise. The stimuli include adrenergic and other circulating factors. There is a period following an exercise bout when fatty acids are directed away from adipose tissue to other tissues such as skeletal muscle, reducing dietary fat storage in adipose. With chronic exercise (training), there are changes in adipose tissue physiology, particularly an enhanced fat mobilization during acute exercise. It is difficult, however, to distinguish chronic "structural" changes from those associated with the last exercise bout. In addition, it is difficult to distinguish between the effects of training per se and negative energy balance. Epidemiological observations support the idea that physically active people have relatively low fat mass, and intervention studies tend to show that exercise training reduces fat mass. A much-discussed effect of exercise versus calorie restriction in preferentially reducing visceral fat is not borne out by meta-analyses. We conclude that, in addition to the regulation of fat mass, physical activity may contribute to metabolic health through beneficial dynamic changes within adipose tissue in response to each activity bout.
spellingShingle Thompson, D
Karpe, F
Lafontan, M
Frayn, K
Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.
title Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.
title_full Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.
title_fullStr Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.
title_full_unstemmed Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.
title_short Physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology.
title_sort physical activity and exercise in the regulation of human adipose tissue physiology
work_keys_str_mv AT thompsond physicalactivityandexerciseintheregulationofhumanadiposetissuephysiology
AT karpef physicalactivityandexerciseintheregulationofhumanadiposetissuephysiology
AT lafontanm physicalactivityandexerciseintheregulationofhumanadiposetissuephysiology
AT fraynk physicalactivityandexerciseintheregulationofhumanadiposetissuephysiology